Wednesday, May 27, 2015

'Pay to stay': Inmates across U.S. charged for their own incarceration

Nearly every state lets prisons and jails charge inmates for their own incarceration — room, board, clothing, and doctor's visits — in a phenomenon called "pay to stay."
We don't know exactly how many prisons and jails take advantage of "pay to stay." The latest survey, in 2005, found that 90 percent of jails surveyed charged inmates fees of one kind of another. In an era of tight budgets, the practice is probably even more widespread today.
The Brennan Center for Justice, a criminal justice reform think tank, put together an analysis of what pay-to-stay laws are on the books in every state. If you're interested in what your state's laws are, you can check out this nifty interactive map on their website. But spoiler alert: your state almost certainly has pay-to-stay.
read more here: http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/pay-to-stay-inmates-across-us-charged-for-their-own-incarceration/ar-BBkgito?ocid=fbmsn

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